Example sentences of "he [verb] [verb] it [art] " in BNC.
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1 | So he agreed to call it a day . |
2 | This was so successful he has done it every year since , but with a different group of children . |
3 | Eliot told me that if he misses his tea he is no good for anything until he has had it the following day . ’ |
4 | Yes , he says , he has known it a little worse , but not much . |
5 | Because he 's got this new system , he wants to use it a bit . |
6 | He 'd applied to join the police in his final year at university ; it had been an unfashionable thing to do but he 'd given it a lot of careful thought . |
7 | It would have been far better if he 'd done it the other way around — the rest of the set acoustic and then brought them on to play . |
8 | The owner before Uncle Titch had been a retired seaman and he 'd renamed it the Turk 's Head , not after an Ottoman warrior , as most people thought , but after a special type of nautical knot that looked like a turban . |
9 | He 'd noticed it the night before . |
10 | But he 'd left it a bit late for consideration for her welfare , she thought hazily . |
11 | Though he prefers to call it the Hospice Coast to Coast , ramblers have already nicknamed the route Clapperton 's Way . |
12 | But on other occasions , to use a phrase of Nietzsche , ‘ a thought comes when ‘ it ’ wants , not when I want ’ , explodes and opens out too fast in in too complex ramifications to be disciplined , takes bold analogical leaps in defiance of logical rigour ; the problem on which it centres is obscure , defining itself in the process of being solved , and as he struggles to formulate it the thought is running in another direction , yet he yields to the flow out of a vague intimation that it will circle back ; for the final effort to force the argument into a coherent and publicly testable form — the only assurance even for himself that he is illumined and not deluded — he waits until the time comes to complete it on paper . |
13 | But he knew they 're bred for working and when he retired he decided to give it a go . |
14 | He decided to call it a day after doctors told him he had lost the other testicle . |
15 | All His Own Work could have been the title of Stephen Coonts ' book , instead he chose to call it The Cannibal Queen ( Century Publishing , 344pp , illus , hbk , £16.99 ) . |
16 | In the Psalms of David Smart had his pattern laid out for him , even if he chose to embroider it a little . |
17 | The trophy became known as the Gordon Bennett Cup , although he preferred to call it the Coupe Internationale . |
18 | Only he had to do it every day . |
19 | He reminded the Treasury that in 1856 he had made it a policy that all public buildings in London should be open to competition and not given as a matter of course to one of his officers , and if their Lordships did not want to hold another competition , they could well appoint the winner of the Foreign Office design , as the judges had selected the prize-winning schemes ‘ not only in regard to their external appearance , but more especially on account of the excellence of their internal arrangements ’ . |
20 | Although he had made it a condition of his NBC appearance that his whereabouts not be disclosed , Neal Miller called next day to say that he had taken over as his handler and to reprimand him for doing the broadcast without permission . |
21 | He had heard it the first time as a child , in his grandfather 's yurt on the Khirgiz , and going to Burun 's quarters had found him awake also . |
22 | He had felt it the greatest lunacy to dispatch men to crowded city parishes with nothing more sustaining than goodwill , a knowledge of the learned tongues and an unrefined familiarity with the Bible . |
23 | She knew what Papa would say because he had said it a few years ago when she had begun to reproach him and all men for their oppression of women . |
24 | He had said it a hundred times over the past blissful hour together , and each time the sound of it had been even sweeter . |
25 | But though everyone was near dead of curiosity , he had kept it a secret what he was planning . |
26 | When he opened it moths flew out and he had to give it a good clean to get rid of the cobwebs and years of dust that had settled inside . |
27 | He went to look for it , remembering that he had used it a couple of times since October , trying to take the plugs out of the estate car . |
28 | He had used it a lot in Seville . |
29 | If he was going to interrupt , he had left it a little late . |
30 | It was not a book that he had packed when leaving London : he had bought it a day or two earlier in Inverness , and to Boswell , years later , he gave , not unmemorably , his reasons for buying it at all : ‘ Why , Sir , if you are to have but one book with you upon a journey , let it be a book of science . |